401. In a monocot embryo, the scutellum is best described as
ⓐ. the protective sheath around the radicle
ⓑ. the single cotyledon attached to the embryonal axis
ⓒ. the outer layer of the seed coat
ⓓ. the triploid nutritive tissue of the seed
Correct Answer: the single cotyledon attached to the embryonal axis
Explanation: Scutellum is the monocot cotyledon and forms part of the embryo. It is attached to the embryonal axis and is a characteristic feature of monocot seeds, especially grasses. It is not one of the protective sheaths and does not represent endosperm or seed coat. Its identification helps separate embryo parts from surrounding tissues.
402. A seed embryo is described as having one cotyledon, a plumule enclosed by a sheath, and a radicle enclosed by another sheath. This embryo is most likely
ⓐ. a dicot embryo with persistent endosperm
ⓑ. a mature embryo sac
ⓒ. a monocot embryo
ⓓ. a pollen grain after germination
Correct Answer: a monocot embryo
Explanation: One cotyledon indicates a monocot embryo, and the presence of protective sheaths around plumule and radicle strongly supports this identification. The plumule is enclosed by the coleoptile and the radicle by the coleorhiza. These features are characteristic of monocot seeds, especially cereals. The description therefore matches a monocot embryo clearly.
403. Choose the correct completion.
In a monocot embryo, the plumule is enclosed by the ______, whereas the radicle is enclosed by the ______.
ⓐ. coleorhiza, scutellum
ⓑ. scutellum, coleoptile
ⓒ. coleoptile, coleorhiza
ⓓ. epicotyl, hypocotyl
Correct Answer: coleoptile, coleorhiza
Explanation: The two protective sheaths of the monocot embryo cover different regions. The coleoptile protects the plumule, and the coleorhiza protects the radicle. Remembering this pair is important for distinguishing monocot embryo organization from that of dicots. The names are similar, but their protected structures are different.
404. Which statement about monocot embryo structure is correct?
ⓐ. The monocot embryo contains two lateral cotyledons storing all reserve food.
ⓑ. The monocot embryo includes a single cotyledon called scutellum and protective sheaths for plumule and radicle.
ⓒ. The monocot embryo lacks an embryonal axis.
ⓓ. The monocot embryo is formed directly from endosperm without a zygote.
Correct Answer: The monocot embryo includes a single cotyledon called scutellum and protective sheaths for plumule and radicle.
Explanation: A typical monocot embryo has an embryonal axis, a single cotyledon called the scutellum, and protective sheaths around the plumule and radicle. These sheaths are the coleoptile and coleorhiza respectively. This organization is the standard structural pattern of a monocot embryo. It differs clearly from the two-cotyledon arrangement of a typical dicot embryo.
405. Which structure of a monocot embryo serves as the single cotyledon and is usually closely associated with the storage tissue of the seed?
ⓐ. Scutellum
ⓑ. Coleoptile
ⓒ. Coleorhiza
ⓓ. Plumule
Correct Answer: Scutellum
Explanation: The scutellum is the single cotyledon of the monocot embryo. It lies adjacent to the storage tissue of the seed and is an important identifying feature of monocot embryos. This makes it different from the two cotyledons of dicot embryos. Its role is structural as part of the embryo, even though it is closely associated with food-reserve tissue.
406. Which statement correctly describes the embryonal axis of a monocot embryo?
ⓐ. It is absent because the scutellum replaces it completely.
ⓑ. It is the same structure as the endosperm.
ⓒ. It bears the plumule and radicle, which are protected by separate sheaths.
ⓓ. It consists only of the seed coat surrounding the cotyledon.
Correct Answer: It bears the plumule and radicle, which are protected by separate sheaths.
Explanation: The monocot embryo has an embryonal axis just as the dicot embryo does. Its shoot end bears the plumule and its root end bears the radicle. These are protected by the coleoptile and coleorhiza respectively. So the monocot embryo is not reduced to only the scutellum.
407. Which statement correctly distinguishes coleoptile from coleorhiza?
ⓐ. Coleoptile protects the radicle, whereas coleorhiza protects the plumule.
ⓑ. Both protect the plumule at different stages.
ⓒ. Both are food-storage structures of the embryo.
ⓓ. Coleoptile protects the plumule, whereas coleorhiza protects the radicle.
Correct Answer: Coleoptile protects the plumule, whereas coleorhiza protects the radicle.
Explanation: The names of these two sheaths are similar, so they are often confused. Coleoptile encloses the plumule, which is the embryonic shoot. Coleorhiza encloses the radicle, which is the embryonic root. Their functions are therefore protective, but each is linked with a different embryonic pole.
408. In a monocot embryo, which part is most directly related to the future root system?
ⓐ. Scutellum
ⓑ. Radicle
ⓒ. Coleoptile
ⓓ. Epicotyl
Correct Answer: Radicle
Explanation: The radicle is the embryonic root region of the seed. After germination, it develops into the primary root system of the young plant. The coleorhiza protects it, but the radicle itself is the structure that gives rise to the root. This is parallel to the role of the radicle in dicot embryos as well.
409. An embryo has one cotyledon, a sheath-covered plumule, and a sheath-covered radicle. Which conclusion is most appropriate?
ⓐ. It is a mature embryo sac.
ⓑ. It is a dicot embryo with persistent endosperm.
ⓒ. It is a monocot embryo.
ⓓ. It is a pollen grain at the three-celled stage.
Correct Answer: It is a monocot embryo.
Explanation: A single cotyledon points strongly to a monocot embryo. The additional presence of protective sheaths around the plumule and radicle makes the identification even clearer. These sheaths are characteristic monocot features called the coleoptile and coleorhiza. So the description fits a monocot embryo rather than a dicot embryo.
410. Which pair includes only protective structures of a monocot embryo?
ⓐ. Coleoptile and coleorhiza
ⓑ. Scutellum and plumule
ⓒ. Radicle and scutellum
ⓓ. Plumule and radicle
Correct Answer: Coleoptile and coleorhiza
Explanation: Coleoptile and coleorhiza are both protective sheaths. The coleoptile protects the plumule, while the coleorhiza protects the radicle. Scutellum is the cotyledon, and plumule and radicle are the embryonic shoot and root themselves, not protective coverings. So only the first pair consists entirely of protective structures.
411. Which statement correctly compares the cotyledons of monocot and dicot embryos?
ⓐ. Both monocot and dicot embryos have two cotyledons, but only monocots have sheaths.
ⓑ. Monocot embryos have one cotyledon called the scutellum, whereas dicot embryos usually have two cotyledons.
ⓒ. Dicot embryos have one cotyledon and monocot embryos have many cotyledons.
ⓓ. Monocot embryos lack cotyledons and use only endosperm.
Correct Answer: Monocot embryos have one cotyledon called the scutellum, whereas dicot embryos usually have two cotyledons.
Explanation: Monocot embryos have a single cotyledon called the scutellum, whereas dicot embryos usually have two cotyledons. Cotyledon number is one of the clearest structural differences between them.
412. Which statement about the plumule in a monocot embryo is correct?
ⓐ. It is enclosed by the coleorhiza.
ⓑ. It is the embryonic shoot protected by the coleoptile.
ⓒ. It is the single cotyledon of the embryo.
ⓓ. It develops into the seed coat after germination.
Correct Answer: It is the embryonic shoot protected by the coleoptile.
Explanation: The plumule is the shoot apex of the embryo. In monocots, it is surrounded and protected by the coleoptile. The coleorhiza belongs to the radicle, not the plumule. This makes the plumule the shoot counterpart of the root-forming radicle.
413. Which feature would be least useful for identifying a monocot embryo?
ⓐ. Presence of two lateral cotyledons
ⓑ. Presence of a scutellum
ⓒ. Presence of a coleoptile
ⓓ. Presence of a coleorhiza
Correct Answer: Presence of two lateral cotyledons
Explanation: Two lateral cotyledons are characteristic of dicot embryos, not monocot embryos. A monocot embryo is identified by one cotyledon, the scutellum, and by protective sheaths such as coleoptile and coleorhiza. Therefore, two cotyledons would argue against a monocot identification. This makes it the least useful feature here.
414. Which sequence correctly matches a monocot embryo structure with its role?
ⓐ. coleorhiza — protects plumule
ⓑ. scutellum — protects radicle
ⓒ. coleoptile — protects plumule
ⓓ. radicle — forms cotyledon
Correct Answer: coleoptile — protects plumule
Explanation: The coleoptile is the sheath that encloses the plumule in a monocot embryo. The coleorhiza protects the radicle, not the plumule. Scutellum is the single cotyledon rather than a sheath. Correct structure-role matching is important because the names of the protective parts are easy to mix up.
415. Which statement best describes the scutellum in relation to the rest of the monocot embryo?
ⓐ. It is the outer fruit wall enclosing the embryo.
ⓑ. It is a single cotyledon attached to the embryonal axis.
ⓒ. It is the protective sheath surrounding the radicle.
ⓓ. It is the nutritive endosperm surrounding the embryo.
Correct Answer: It is a single cotyledon attached to the embryonal axis.
Explanation: The scutellum is not an external tissue or a sheath. It is the cotyledon of the monocot embryo and forms part of the embryo proper. It remains attached to the embryonal axis, which also bears the plumule and radicle. This makes the scutellum a true embryonic structure rather than a surrounding support tissue.
416. Choose the correct completion.
A typical monocot embryo has one cotyledon called the scutellum; its plumule is protected by the ______ and its radicle by the ______.
ⓐ. coleorhiza, coleoptile
ⓑ. scutellum, hypocotyl
ⓒ. epicotyl, root cap
ⓓ. coleoptile, coleorhiza
Correct Answer: coleoptile, coleorhiza
Explanation: The monocot embryo includes two characteristic protective sheaths. Coleoptile surrounds the plumule, and coleorhiza surrounds the radicle. Together with the scutellum, these features give the monocot embryo its standard textbook organization. Remembering this pair helps separate monocot embryo structure from dicot embryo structure.
417. Which statement correctly compares the protective sheaths of a monocot embryo?
ⓐ. Coleoptile protects the radicle, whereas coleorhiza protects the plumule.
ⓑ. Coleoptile protects the plumule, whereas coleorhiza protects the radicle.
ⓒ. Both coleoptile and coleorhiza protect only the cotyledon.
ⓓ. Both are food-storage parts of the embryo.
Correct Answer: Coleoptile protects the plumule, whereas coleorhiza protects the radicle.
Explanation: The monocot embryo has two distinct protective sheaths around its main growing regions. The plumule, which is the embryonic shoot, is enclosed by the coleoptile. The radicle, which is the embryonic root, is enclosed by the coleorhiza. These sheaths protect the delicate growing points during early germination.
418. A seed embryo is described as having an embryonal axis with one cotyledon closely attached to it, a shoot tip enclosed in a sheath, and a root tip enclosed in another sheath. This description best fits a
ⓐ. monocot embryo
ⓑ. dicot embryo
ⓒ. mature embryo sac
ⓓ. pollen grain
Correct Answer: monocot embryo
Explanation: A single cotyledon points to a monocot embryo, and the sheath-covered shoot and root tips confirm it further. The single cotyledon is called the scutellum. The plumule is protected by the coleoptile and the radicle by the coleorhiza. Together, these features form the standard structural pattern of a monocot embryo.
419. Which statement best distinguishes the scutellum of a monocot embryo from the cotyledons of a dicot embryo?
ⓐ. The scutellum is a protective sheath, whereas dicot cotyledons are not.
ⓑ. The scutellum is a single cotyledon, whereas dicot embryos usually have two cotyledons.
ⓒ. The scutellum is part of the seed coat, whereas dicot cotyledons are part of the embryo.
ⓓ. The scutellum forms the radicle, whereas dicot cotyledons form the plumule.
Correct Answer: The scutellum is a single cotyledon, whereas dicot embryos usually have two cotyledons.
Explanation: The number of cotyledons is a basic difference between monocot and dicot embryos. In monocots, the single cotyledon is called the scutellum. In dicots, two cotyledons are usually present. This difference is one of the first structural clues used to distinguish the two embryo types.
420. Which structure-role pair is incorrectly matched?
ⓐ. Scutellum — single cotyledon of monocot embryo
ⓑ. Coleoptile — protective sheath around plumule
ⓒ. Coleorhiza — protective sheath around radicle
ⓓ. Radicle — future shoot apex
Correct Answer: Radicle — future shoot apex
Explanation: The radicle is the embryonic root, not the shoot apex. It develops into the primary root of the seedling. The shoot apex of the embryo is represented by the plumule. The other three pairs are correct standard matches in monocot embryo structure.